Gregory Thomas of the Canadian Taxpayers Federation says that the taxpayer funded ads are getting out of hand. In a recent editorial, he also highlighted the prime minister's hypocrisy.

"Stephen Harper has grown comfortable sitting on the other side of the aisle, in the Prime Minister’s chair, where Jean Chrétien once tried to contain the sponsorship scandal, deflecting Harper’s outrage and Harper’s demands that he put a stop to pork-barreling government advertising practices," he said in statement released in December.

"Since taking power in 2006, Harper’s attitude toward advertising has changed drastically. Hardly a hockey playoff season has gone by without a multi-million dollar barrage of taxpayer-financed television federal government propaganda polluting the airwaves between face-offs."

By no means are the Tories, the only ones who use taxpayer dollars to self-promote.

In Alberta, the Redford government has been slammed for spending $1 million on Tory blue highway signage that seem to have no utility. They do, however, include the words: "the Honorable Alison Redford, Premier."

In British Columbia, the Christy Clark government was criticized, last year, for a $15 million pre-election ad campaign touting that province's still unproven job plan. Incidentally, Clark complained about partisan ads when she was in opposition.

As Harper's turnaround proves, we can't trust individual governments to curb this type of spending.

Instead, the CTF is encouraging all federal and provincial governments follow Ontario's lead and introduce a bill that would require all taxpayer-funded advertising be approved by the Auditor General in order to ensure that they "are scourged of partisan content."

"This is an opportunity for the government to do the right thing and put this behind them, and for the opposition to show that they would not use this tool for themselves if they ever had the chance, the CTF notes.

"Parties don’t need the money, they are already heavily subsidized by taxpayers in the form of generous tax receipts. If parties want to advertise, they can pay for it out of their own coffers."